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Encyclopedia > Mons Veneris

In human anatomy, the mons veneris (Latin, mound of Venus), is the soft mound of flesh just over the vulva in females (more generally in mammals it is called the mons pubis), raised above the surrounding area due to a pad of fat lying just beneath it. After puberty it is normally covered with pubic hair to a greater or lesser extent. The labia majora or large lips extend on either side of the vulva, and may also be covered with pubic hair.

A man and a woman in the . The woman's genitals are not depicted, only the mons pubis.
A man and a woman in the Pioneer plaque. The woman's genitals are not depicted, only the mons pubis.

The title of John Cleland's erotic classic, Fanny Hill, or the Memoirs of a Woman of Pleasure, is a punning reference to this anatomical feature: 'Fanny' being a British English slang term for the vulva.


The aesthetic structure created by the crease-like indentation of the vulva into the mons veneris, is sometimes referred to as a "cameltoe", due to its visual similarity to the area between a camel's toes. An irreverent website devoted to this particular aspect of human anatomy can be found at http://www.cameltoe.org


Pioneer plaque

On board the unmanned spacecraft Pioneer 10 and Pioneer 11 is a plaque with a pictoral message from mankind. The plaque shows the figures of a man and a woman along with several symbols that are designed to provide information about the origin of the spacecrafts.


According to Sagan (Murmurs of Earth, 1978, New York, ISBN 0679744444), there were many negative reactions to the plaque due to the fact that the human beings were displayed naked. The Chicago Sun Times retouched its image to hide the genitals of the man and woman. The Los Angeles Times received "angry letters" from readers which accused NASA of wasting taxpayer money to send "obscenities" into space.


Furthermore, one can see that the woman's genitals are not really depicted, only the mons veneris is shown. It has been claimed that Sagan, having little time to complete the plaque, suspected that NASA would have rejected a more intricate drawing and therefore made a compromise just to be safe. (Alan Fletcher, "The art of looking sideways")


  Results from FactBites:
 
JustEves.com - Anatomy of the Female Reproductive System (446 words)
The mons veneris, Latin for "hill of Venus" is the pad of fat that covers the pubic bone below the abdomen but above the labia.
The mons is one of the sexually sensitive zones in women and protects the pubic bone from the impact of sexual intercourse.
The labia minora are the inner lips of the vulva, thin stretches of tissue within the labia majora that fold and protect the vagina, urethra, and clitoris.
mons - definition of mons in Encyclopedia (178 words)
Mons (Dutch: Bergen) is a municipality located in the Belgian province of Hainaut, of which it is the capital.
Located close to the French border, it is the centre of the Borinage district, the old coal mining centre of the country.
Mons was the site of the first battle fought by the British Army in World War I.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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